Scientific Reports (Jun 2024)

Emergence of potentially disinfection-resistant, naturalized Escherichia coli populations across food- and water-associated engineered environments

  • Daniel Yu,
  • Paul Stothard,
  • Norman F. Neumann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-64241-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract The Escherichia coli species is comprised of several ‘ecotypes’ inhabiting a wide range of host and natural environmental niches. Recent studies have suggested that novel naturalized ecotypes have emerged across wastewater treatment plants and meat processing facilities. Phylogenetic and multilocus sequence typing analyses clustered naturalized wastewater and meat plant E. coli strains into two main monophyletic clusters corresponding to the ST635 and ST399 sequence types, with several serotypes identified by serotyping, potentially representing distinct lineages that have naturalized across wastewater treatment plants and meat processing facilities. This evidence, taken alongside ecotype prediction analyses that distinguished the naturalized strains from their host-associated counterparts, suggests these strains may collectively represent a novel ecotype that has recently emerged across food- and water-associated engineered environments. Interestingly, pan-genomic analyses revealed that the naturalized strains exhibited an abundance of biofilm formation, defense, and disinfection-related stress resistance genes, but lacked various virulence and colonization genes, indicating that their naturalization has come at the cost of fitness in the original host environment.